I�ve been wondering this myself lately, best I can come up with so far is basically we�re renting the time/machine and any illegalities are born by the user and offer to sell �em blank cd�s for a buck or so.Fine points like hold harmless clauses no doubt would follow.

 

JSky

(today we�re calling it) we' Texasrspace

e/machine and any illegalities are born by the user then attach a hold harmless clause and offer to sell e Nameless Innerspace

E.Texas

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of CyberCentral, Internet Work Station
Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2000 2:07 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [cc] Napster

 

I'm just wondering how you all treat Napster use by your customers. Now that we have ADSL up and running (it's awesome :-)   ), I get 10 people a day wanting to download mp3s. There are 2 issues for me:

 

1)    Legality: Of course, every country is probably going to be different, but are we going to get dealt to for letting our customers use Napster (I know, Napster's legal, but copying music's not). If we decide to let customers use Napster, they'll then want to take files home with them. And copying music files to a CD Rom must REALLY be something we have to be careful about.

 

2)    Should you have decided that the legality thing is either not a problem or worth risking, how do you charge?

 

David

Palma de Mallorca

 

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